Noel Aubert de Versé explained

Noel Aubert de Versé (c. 1642/45 in Le Mans – 1714) was a French advocate of religious toleration, whose own religious position oscillated between Unitarian Protestantism and an Oratorian-influenced Catholicism.

Life

Raised a Catholic, Aubert de Versé[1] took a medical degree in Paris but converted to Protestantism in 1662, and studied at the Protestant Academy of Sedan to become a minister in the Dutch Republic. Ejected from the ministry in 1668/9 as a suspected Socinian,[2] he reverted to Catholicism in 1670 and practiced medicine. After the Edict of Fontainebleau, he turned away from Catholicism, but was accused of anti-Trinitarianism and attacked by supporters of Pierre Jurieu.[3] In 1682 he undertook an abortive mission to England in order to establish political links with the Moroccan ambassador,[2] After moving to Hamburg and Danzig, and another visit to England in 1689, he was allowed to return to Paris on condition that he return to Catholicism and write against Socinianism.[4] He translated Richard Simon's critical history of the Old Testament into Latin, and wrote controversial works against both Spinoza and Jurieu.

Works

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. https://catalogue.bnf.fr/rechercher.do?motRecherche=Noel+Aubert+de+Vers%C3%A9+&critereRecherche=0&depart=0&facetteModifiee=ok BnF autorités
  2. Martin Mulsow, The 'New Socinians': Intertextuality and Cultural Exchange in late Socinianism, in Martin Mulsow and Jan Rohls, Socinianism and Arminianism: Antitrinitarianism, Calvinists and Cultural Exchange in Seventeenth-Century Europe, pp. 57-60
  3. John Marshall, John Locke, toleration and early Enlightenment culture, Cambridge University Press, 2006, p. 186
  4. The Cambridge History of Eighteenth-Century Political Thought, ed. Mark Goldie and Robert Wokler, Cambridge University Press, 2006, p. 782